ZnS Nanocrystal−Peptide Conjugates for Long-term

Thilo Papp , Dietmar Schiffmann , Dieter Weiss , Vince Castranova , Val Vallyathan , Qamar Rahman. Nanotoxicology 2008 2 (1), .... Byron Ballou. 2005,...
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NANO LETTERS

Fluorescent CdSe/ZnS Nanocrystal−Peptide Conjugates for Long-term, Nontoxic Imaging and Nuclear Targeting in Living Cells

2004 Vol. 4, No. 10 1827-1832

Fanqing Chen*,†,§ and Daniele Gerion‡,§ Life Sciences DiVision, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, and Physics and AdVanced Technology, Lawrence LiVermore National Laboratory, LiVermore, California 94551 Received June 1, 2004; Revised Manuscript Received July 31, 2004

ABSTRACT One of the biggest challenges in cell biology is the imaging of living cells. For this purpose, the most commonly used visualization tool is fluorescent markers. However, conventional labels, such as organic fluorescent dyes or green fluorescent proteins (GFP), lack the photostability to allow the tracking of cellular events that happen over a period from minutes to days. In addition, they are either toxic to cells (dyes) or difficult to construct and manipulate (GFP). We report here the use of a new class of fluorescent labels, silanized CdSe/ZnS nanocrystal− peptide conjugates, for imaging the nuclei of living cells. CdSe/ZnS nanocrystals, or so-called quantum dots (qdots), are extremely photostable, and have been used extensively in cellular imaging of fixed cells. Most of the studies about living cells so far have been concerned only with particle entry into the cytoplasm or the localization of receptors on the cell membrane. Specific targeting of qdots to the nucleus of living cells has not been reported in previous studies, due to the lack of a targeting mechanism and proper particle size. Here we demonstrate for the first time the construction of a CdSe/ZnS nanocrystal−peptide conjugate that carries the SV40 large T antigen nuclear localization signal (NLS) and the transfection of the complex into living cells. By a novel adaptation for qdots of a commonly used cell transfection technique, we were able to introduce and retain the NLS−qdots conjugate in living cells for up to a week without detectable negative cellular effects. Moreover, we can visualize the movement of the CdSe/ZnS nanocrystal−peptide conjugates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, as well as the accumulation of the complex in the cell nucleus, over a long observation time period. This report opens the door for using qdots to visualize long-term biological events that happen in the cell nucleus and provides a new nontoxic, long-term imaging platform for observing nuclear trafficking mechanisms and cell nuclear processes.

To understand the complexity and dynamics of cellular events in living organisms, it is desirable to image the nucleic acids, proteins, or metabolites inside living cells. In live cell imaging, the entry of the probe into the nucleus and its visualization constitute increasingly important areas of research.1,2 The nucleus is a desirable target because the genomic DNA, which carries the genetic information of the cell, resides there. In addition, numerous nuclear proteins participate actively in critical cellular processes, such as DNA replication, recombination, RNA transcription, DNA damage and repair, genomic alterations, and cell cycle control. The efficient transport of probes into the nuclei of living cells would greatly enhance the diagnosis of disease genotype, the tracking of oligonucleotide drugs, the understanding of biological processing in the nucleus, and the identification * Corresponding author. Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, MS 74R0157, 1 Cyclotron Rd., Berkeley, CA 94720. † Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. ‡ Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. § F.CandD.G.contributedequally.E-mail:[email protected];[email protected]. 10.1021/nl049170q CCC: $27.50 Published on Web 09/09/2004

© 2004 American Chemical Society

of potential nuclear drug candidates. However, in living cells, a double-membrane nuclear envelope separates the cytoplasm from the cell nucleus. This physical barrier is impermeable to most kinds of probes, except at specific locations, a few tens of nanometers wide, called the nuclear pores.3 Currently, for imaging living cells, fluorescent tagging with organic fluorophores4 or green fluorescent protein5 (GFP) is still the most commonly used method. Unfortunately, organic dyes are usually toxic to the cells and therefore the use of organic fluorophores for live cell applications has obvious limitations. Moreover, organic dyes and GFP both suffer from notorious shortcomings such as photobleaching, which preclude their use in many long-term imaging applications. These fluorophores also have limited sensitivity and resolution, both of which are critical factors for accurate tracking of individual biomolecules. Finally, recombinant GFP fusion proteins are cumbersome to construct, and longterm imaging (>3 days) with GFP requires the timeconsuming process of establishing stable-expressing clones.

To solve the stability and sensitivity issue, other types of labels such as polymeric,6 magnetic,7 and metallic8-10 particles have been introduced into cells. However, fluorescence microscopy remains the simplest and most-used detection tool, and it would therefore be desirable to develop a technology based on robust fluorescent probes. Inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals, or qdots, represent this alternative technology.11 Qdots, such as CdSe/ZnS core/shell nanoparticles, are inorganic fluorophores with a size below 10 nm. Compared to conventional dyes, they have a much higher photobleaching threshold and negligible photobleaching under biological imaging conditions. Qdots can be silanized12 and, in that form, have reduced phototoxicity and are highly resistant to chemical and metabolic degradation.13 Finally, whereas the organic fluorophores require customized chemistry for conjugation of biomolecules to each fluorophore, a universal approach can be used for the conjugation of biomolecules to all silanized qdots, because the silica shell coatings for different qdots are identical. Unlike technologies based on gold nanoparticles or organic labels, the use of qdot labels is still in its infancy. Yet this technology is progressing at a fast pace.14,15 Recently, a wide variety of biomolecules such as DNA,16,17 proteins, antibodies,18,19 short peptides,20 and neurotransmitters21 have been attached to qdots. For instance, qdots have been used extensively as immunohistochemical labels in fixed cells. In Vitro, qdots conjugated to immunoglobin G (IgG) have been used for the detection of membrane proteins such as the cancer marker Her2. The study of living cells presents an additional difficulty, viz., the introduction of the qdots inside the cells. Different methods have been reported. The crawling over a qdot-coated collagen surface allows the living cells to engulf the nanoparticles, which permits the study of their motility patterns.13 Microinjection into Xenopus embryo has been used to follow cell dynamics during embryogenesis.17 Finally, receptor-mediated endocytosis has also been used to transfect living cells. For instance, qdots bearing Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) have been demonstrated to bind to erbB/Her receptors and are actively endocytosed into endosomes in living cells.22 Even though in Vitro and in ViVo imaging with qdots has been demonstrated, most of these studies have focused on the entry of dots into the cytoplasm or targeting of the membrane proteins.15,17-19,21 Detection of nuclear proteins has been reported only in fixed cells by using antinuclear antigens.19 Qdots have also been shown to accumulate in cell nuclei by passive diffusion after cell division.17 However, so far, no report has investigated the feasibility of active and targeted localization of qdots into the nuclei of living cells. The challenges for the use of qdots for targeted nuclear delivery are multiple.2,9,23,24 First, qdots must have a surface chemistry that allows their escape from endosomal/lysosomal pathways in living cells. Second, qdots must possess a nuclear localization signal (NLS) in order to be transported by the nuclear trafficking proteins and to interact with the nuclear pore complex. Third, the diameter of the nuclear pore complex is 20-50 nm depending on the cell line,3 and therefore the qdot conjugates have to be small enough (